A subscription to brighten your day at the office

 
 
Photo: Shutterstock

Photo: Shutterstock

 

Are your pencils, scissors, and sticky notes continually disappearing at work? Cloth & Paper has the right solution for you ... and your office thieves.

 

Everything that offices used to have so that we could work, is today being replaced by a couple of smartphone apps. The only thing they can’t do is turn into a ficus tree. There is, however, no reason to completely give up pens and other accessories. Especially if you can have them delivered in Cloth & Paper boxes.

 
Photo: Shutterstock

Photo: Shutterstock

 

If you are an avid user of attractive and high-quality branded pencils, colour stickers, and unique planners, their subscription is perfect for you. It also means that you can stop worrying that you’ll run out of them just when you need them the most.

Cloth & Paper subscribers also receive regular surprises. The pleasant ones: when you know what you have ordered, but also not necessarily what you will get.

 

Every office surprise box comes with six to eight products, some of them personalised.

 

There are three options to choose from: a diverse selection of pens and pencils every month, a planner stationery box, or a combination of both.

The price depends on what you choose. A three-month subscription will cost you from $49 to $130, depending on the chosen box.

 
Photo: William Iven/Unsplash

Photo: William Iven/Unsplash

 

Due to limited stock, you should start your subscription in the first half of the month; plus you’ll receive a ten percent discount on your first box. Boxes ship between the 19th and 23rd of every month. 

So what can you expect to find inside? The Planner Stationery box includes pens, notebooks, sticky notes, notepads, stickers, notebooks, journal cards, postcards, envelopes, scissors, and more – items which you might need at work every day.

 
Photo: Tim Gouw/Unsplash

Photo: Tim Gouw/Unsplash

 

Cloth & Paper boxes include six to eight different products, some even customised, so that it is easier to catch the colleague who continually »borrows« things from your desk. When concluding the subscription, they will ask for your name and initials for monogramming and printing them on the items.

If you by any chance run out of any of the items before the next box arrives, you can always visit their online shop and buy what you need. The ficus tree is the only thing that you will have to get from the florist.